One of our most widely beloved contributors, prolific poet and nonfiction writer Paisley Rekdal, has not only published another book (and a great one!) but also scheduled a remarkable event at the Chautauqua Institution for this August–one of no doubt *broad* appeal.

More about The Broken Country

Paisley describes The Broken Country as a “book-length essay on cultural trauma and the inter-generational legacies of war.” Her website elaborates on the circumstances that prompted her to write:

In 2012, a young Vietnamese man named Kiet Thanh Ly walked into a downtown Salt Lake City megastore, purchased a knife, and began stabbing white male passersby in the parking lot, purportedly in revenge for the war in Vietnam: a war that, due to Ly’s age, he never immediately experienced.

The Broken Country explores how Ly’s case may be at the heart of a larger discussion of war’s trauma, historical memory, cultural assimilation, and identity: issues that refugees and veterans alike must face when repatriating after war. Through investigative reporting, cultural criticism, oral history and personal reflection, The Broken Country considers the sheer number of people psychologically wounded by violence.

In Ly’s tragic story, we might find the fascinating, if controversial, beginnings of a new kind of war memorial: one that draws together the testimony and trauma of war’s less visible victims.

If you can’t buy the book locally, where you might do your country and your favorite bookseller the most good, may we suggest IndieBound or Amazon?

And for immediate gratification, we invite you to enjoy Paisley’s absorbing, often shocking essay “The Lives of Strangers,” available online. It’s a true tale of marriage, betrayal, and murder in Salt Lake City, which we were proud to feature in our inaugural print issue, “Dangerous Territory” (now sold out, so don’t even try asking for one).

Paisley’s memoir-essay is in conversation with a stunning image, Buddy Patrol, by master painter Josh George.

Find out a little more about Paisley, her life, and her career by clicking here.

Here are few details about the Chautauqua event for now–please click on the link below to learn more and to secure tickets, then read further for more information about and photos of the hallowed buildings of Chautauqua itself: